Michael Mann

Duration: 59 mins 40 secs
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Description: An interview with Professor Michal Mann, the sociologist and historian and author of 'The Social Basis of Power' and other works. Interviewed and filmed by Alan Macfarlane on 18th July 2005, lasts about one hour. Generously supported by the Leverhulme Trust.
 
Created: 2011-04-07 12:22
Collection: Film Interviews with Leading Thinkers
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: Professor Alan Macfarlane
Language: eng (English)
Keywords: history; empire; World; power;
Credits:
Actor:  Michael Mann
Director:  Alan Macfarlane
Reporter:  Sarah Harrison
Transcript
Transcript:
0:05:07 Introduction; born August 1942 in Manchester but moved to Northumberland when I was five; father a salesman for an asbestos company; at ten moved back to Rochdale; went to Manchester Grammar School; middle child with elder sister and younger brother; influenced by father with whom I discussed and argued; first political experience was as Liberal in Rochdale, like father; mother loving and warm; unhappy when I told her at thirteen that I was an atheist; father highly intelligent, books in the house, and encouraged education for the boys

3:20:00 At school, better at arts subjects than sciences; history was main interest but influenced by father to read law at Oxford; did one term of law and switched to history; went to University College in 1960; at Oxford did a lot of politics, first in the Liberal Club and then the Labour Club; didn't work terribly hard except in the last year and got a second class degree; not terribly stimulated by the Oxford history course; impressed by Isaiah Berlin, but the course seemed old-fashioned; most interested in special subject which was the French Revolution; now working on empires and was taught by David Fieldhouse whose books I am now reading, but at nineteen he left me cold; I had no thought of doing research although wanted to stay another year in Oxford because of girlfriend, Jill Ditchburn; so did the diploma in Public and Social Administration; married at twenty-two; Jill Mann who became Professor of English Literature at Cambridge; I was going to be a probation officer but in the department of Social Administration, Halsey offered him empirical research for General Foods Corporation which would lead to PhD in Sociology; accepted; had done sociology course in the diploma, and Peter Collison who taught me stimulated me most

8:40:14 The factory moved from Birmingham to Banbury, a well-studied place; did before and after interviews of workers and managers; first survey had to done within six months of start of PhD; knowing very little had to draw up questionnaire and work out how to analyse interviews; also had to learn about computer techniques which were just moving from counter sorters to paper tape data; very much self-taught and struggling to get things done; hard work; mixture of industrial relations and family and community; my dissertation was first referred; examined by Jean Floud and Norman Denis; experience of viva; by then had moved to Cambridge as a research officer in the department of Applied Economics working with John Goldthorpe and Robert Blackburn; in that year produced small book 'Consciousness and Action in the Western Working Class'; description of the book; moved on to do some impirical research on the Peterborough labour market with Bob Blackburn; team of interviewers interviewed about 900 workers in six different companies; at the same time rewriting thesis; Goldthorpe moved to Oxford and took over as my supervisor from Peter Collison and Alan Fox; heard that Goldthorpe insisted that Jean Floud be removed as examiner so got PhD; learnt a lot about sociology from Goldthorpe

16:24:00 Spent four years in Cambridge; political views changing and became convinced that problem of cold war didn't have much to do with capitalism or socialism, but rivalry between great powers; offered assistant lectureship in Cambridge in what became S.P.S; very first publication was an article in American Sociological Review; secondary analysis of a lot of survey data in Britain and U.S. about the extent to which lower class people accepted the inequalities in society; developed notion of pragmatic acceptance of reality; at interview for job showed the article which I'd got that day; did not take the job as persuaded to go to Essex University by David Lockwood; stayed from 1970 to 1977; at interview asked if I would teach interdisciplinary course on the enlightenment; also taught classical sociological theory which I continue to do today; Essex good, students questioning, thought that sociology might provide the answer to questions on the meaning of life; stimulating colleagues and time for self-development; 1972 wrote paper for myself contrasting Marx and Weber with idea of writing a book on this with some empirical case studies, one on Roman Empire, one on feudalism and one contemporary; gradually turned into 'The Sources of Social Power'; took the further step of separating the military from the political;gradually case studies became bigger with linking historical passages; got too big and separated it into two volumes

26:01:20 During this time wife still in Cambridge and commuting life put strain on marriage; broke up in about 1975; went to L.S.E. in 1977 as Reader in Research Methods; puzzles me how I got the job with few publications; in Colchester had been politically active in the Labour party, trying to keep the right and left of the party together; wrote a Fabian pamphlet at that time; moved to Lambeth; one replacement at Essex was Nicky Hart and we overlapped for one term; she was wife of Keith Hart, then at Yale, but she became my second wife; she had daughter Louise, then aged two, and we have two other children, Gareth and Laura; had nice family life in Dedham, Essex, from where I commuted to London

31:33:00 At L.S.E. the big experience for me was not really within the sociology department; not a happy department due to Donald Macrae and Terence Morris who had forced Ernest Gellner out; intolerant of new ideas; people of own age had unofficial seminars which Ernest Gellner, John Hall and I ran called 'Patterns of History'; invited those we wanted to hear and would have a meal together afterwards; invited such persons as Colin Renfrew, Keith Hopkins etc.; at this time John, Ernest and I were all writing books of broad theoretical history at this time; almost the best experience I have had though there has been an comparable one at U.C.L.A.; at L.S.E. from 1977-87; in 1985 got together with someone in the International Relations department and was going to do a course in globalisation but blocked by Macrae and Morris; blocked for promotion at about the same time; told I could apply independently from department which I did; got a chair, but before this had been hired by U.C.L.A.; first volume of 'Sources of Social Power' came out in 1986; had decided to separate it into two volumes about 1984; first volume went from prehistoric time to before the Industrial Revolution; thought the book might sink without trace so contacted everybody I knew in America and asked to give talks; by the time the lecture tour happened the book was very successful but Americans assumed I was looking for a job; U.C.L.A. and University of Virginia offered both Nicky and I full time positions; took U.C.L.A. offer and have been there ever since

38:55:12 At U.C.L.A. have had comparable experience to Gellner and Hall seminar; Bob Brenner, Perry Anderson and I are the leading people; we invite people we want to hear from all over the world; have a theme each year and it is interdisciplinary; although I consider myself a sociologist, have never been happy to be trapped inside a discipline; in 1994 I went to Madrid for a year; at that time a little unhappy in California, mainly about the education of our children; after Madrid had a sabbatical in England and looked for jobs here; Nicky started a job at University of East London chairing the department and I was offered jobs by Essex and L.S.E.; Nicky was unhappy in her job so we decided to move back to California; 1998 took American citizenship so have dual nationality; Los Angeles a stimulating and interesting place

42:29:17 Having produced volume 1 of 'Sources of Social Power', volume 2 followed in 1993 which went to 1914; volume 3 remains unfinished; in Spain decided to work on chapter on fascism; this turned into two books, the first 'Fascists' (2004) and the second, 'The Dark Side of Democracy' (2005) explaining ethnic cleansing; I am waiting to see what reaction is; in 2002 began to write a book on Bush American foreign policy, 'Incoherent Empire', which was almost entirely written before the invasion of Iraq; came out September 2003; description of book; invited to be Pitt Professor in Cambridge and decided to give lectures on modern empires; first one on why the Europeans are so imperialistic; the second asks did the British Empire do anyone any good? The third was a comparison of Japan and the U.S. in Asia and fourth on the American Empire today; am expanding these mainly by looking at American foreign policy from the beginning; this period in Cambridge has allowed me to research and write; the result will be published end of 2006

47:04:10 Working methods; things have changed with computers; at U.C.L.A. can order books from the library by computer and have them delivered to my office; I do an enormous amount of pillaging of books for factual material; have taken extensive notes; have just discovered a new technique of library raiding from book reviews in journals on the web; all my notes are in my laptop; had a basic methodology in my raiding which was that I would carry on reading until I was only changing the details; looking at Japanese Empire and trying to see if it was a series of accidents or a probability

51:39:20 Writing a book usually takes time, six years rather than six months; material for 'Incoherent Empire' came largely from the web; try and begin to write at quite an early stage as a way of organising the notes, then rewrite and rewrite; don't write at any particular time of day; my wife is a morning person and I have been influenced by that; used to be a 9-5 worker; tragedy of a relatively successful academic is the older you get the harder you work; still play tennis and have just taken up golf; used to do gardening; when I was a traditional sociologist I used to read history books as a diversion, now this is a part of my work

54:12:00 Global history; owe most to Max Weber and then to Karl Marx; remember being impressed by Owen Lattimore, William McNeal, Eisenstadt; world history difficult to do and would never recommend young people to start doing what I am doing; have to do get an idea of what detailed research is first and later take a comparative view; I haven't done any collaborative work since that with Bob Blackburn and am a bit of a loner so not aware of enormous influences

57:25:17 After the book on empires, still determined to write volume 3 of 'Sources of Social Power' to bring it up to date; maybe there will be a volume 4 on theory; Gary Runciman, Perry Anderson and Wallerstein.
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